Archive for January, 2010

Sunday, January 31, 2010

The First Class of Akilah Students

Elizabeth Davis, CEO

A recent text message from an Akilah student to Monique Schmidt, Akilah Program Director.

“Hi, I’m so glad to hear your good voice. I think that you will develop my mind, and my family because I’m very interested in all who will teach me. OK, see you soon, thank you so much. May God bless you at all.”

After a rigorous admissions process, we have selected our first class of 50 incredibly impressive young women who will attend Akilah.  Although our students come from varied backgrounds and parts of Rwanda, they share the desire to learn and become leaders in their communities. They will arrive at the Akilah campus early on Tuesday morning for their first day of classes.

The Foundation Year is a one year program designed for students who demonstrate exceptional potential, but need another year of English and core courses. They will study Intensive English, Introduction to Hospitality, Health & Nutrition, and Leadership & Ethics. The small class size ensures that each student will receive mentoring and guidance from Akilah teachers and staff. Upon successful completion of the Foundation Year, students will begin the Akilah Diploma in January 2011.

(Beginning in 2011, Akilah will offer a 2 year diploma in hospitality studies that will train young women to be leaders and entrepreneurs in the fastest growing sector of the Rwandan economy.)

Many Akilah students have only studied in French-speaking schools and English is their third or fourth language.

(Although, the Rwandan government made a bold statement when they decided to change the education system from French to English. )

One of the bright Akilah classrooms- ready for books and students!

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Classrooms Come to Life

Elizabeth Davis, CEO

Classroom Colors

A student group from Eckerd College in Florida was in Kigali last week to volunteer at Akilah. We put them to work right away and they helped us paint our classrooms. Students start classes on February 2 so the last week has been a flurry of activity – finishing the last bits of construction on the facilities, painting classrooms, moving in the furniture, installing the internet and more.

We are so grateful to the Eckerd team for coming all this way to help- and for making the classrooms look bright and beautiful! It is so important that the Akilah students are studying in an environment that inspires them. The blues and greens of the classrooms are a stunning compliment to the large windows that overlook the Nyarutarama valley.

Eckerd students preparing for a long day of painting

An Eckerd student starts painting one of the classrooms

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Why Akilah?

Monique Schmidt, Program Director

My first 2 months here have been a flurry of activity, trying to soak up as much about Akilah and Rwanda as possible, trying to learn about our girls and what they have been through, trying to connect the different realities I see emerge. During my first weeks here, I visited the genocide memorials. I saw the blood on the walls, saw the grenade holes in the wall, saw all the pictures of girls who didn’t make it.

Then I talked to our girls. In over 75 interviews, I became overwhelmed by how often I got the same response, “I’m an orphan” ”I’m head of household.” “I’ve been head of household for many years.” Then I asked, “So, why Akilah?” And again, most often I got the same response. “I want to help my country” “I want to help my country. Rwanda needs educated women to grow.” It makes me wonder how many of the American students I have taught previously have listed “helping their country” as the reason they want to get an education.

Finally, after the interviews and the exam, I handed out the acceptance letters, and the stoic, reserved faces erupted into smiles and laughter. Akilah is ready to begin! And I started thinking about what it really means to open a school for young orphaned women. Lives are about to be changed: theirs…and mine. We begin a journey into growth and success, and hopefully, friendship and laughter.

Joy Businge, Operations Manager; Monique, Program Director; Elizabeth, CEO.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Fired Up, Ready to Go

Mary Powell, Lead Instructor

Akilah team at staff retreat in Gisenyi

Things are getting exciting here at Akilah! We have just returned from our first retreat as a full staff.

Arriving from several different countries and cities, nine of us took a car trip to Gisenyi, a beautiful town in northwestern Rwanda, to get to know each other and make plans for the coming year. Gisenyi is perched at the northern tip of enormous Lake Kivu, nestled against the border between Rwanda and the war-ravaged Eastern Congo. Staying in an extraordinary family-run hotel so close to such a desperate land reminded us of how far Rwanda has come over the past decade and how much Akilah students will be able to contribute to the region after their time with us.

We began our retreat with a team-building exercise derived from the American Blackfoot Indian tribe. “Kanatapi” is one of many team-building and sharing exercises our staff will continue to do throughout the coming year to ensure group cohesion and let the creativity flow.

Over the course of three days, we crafted an Akilah Community Pledge for all staff and students to sign, made plans for our upcoming opening ceremony, and gave teaching demonstrations for each other before heading back to Kigali.

We’ve all jumped right into preparations for our first Foundation Year classes, which begin next week. We are working hard to ensure that our students have an excellent and challenging experience right from Day One.

As classes begin over the coming weeks, keep your eyes peeled for videos following some of our incredible students through their journey at Akilah!

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Why I Joined the Akilah Team – Jon

Jonathan Kleiman, Media and Marketing

I’ve thought about why specifically I’m drawn to women’s education.  There are, of course, plenty of reasons to believe it’s important.  The benefits of educating a woman pervade her life and the many communities to which she belongs.  An educated woman will have fewer children, be in better health, avoid more abuse, and the economy of her family, her village and her country will improve as she starts generating income herself.  This is all fantastic.  But it’s not, I’ve realized, what compels me most.

I am compelled by education’s capacity to empower, to equip people with the tools and autonomy to direct their own lives.

Women in the developing world are among the most disenfranchised.  Many marry young, lucky by then if they’ve learned how to read, and spend their lives raising their large families and living at the mercy of their more powerful husbands.    They maintain almost no autonomy to chart the course of their own lives.  Without educations, they are left to live the lives their culture has prescribed.

To educate a woman in a culture like this is to restore to her some basic humanity, to give her the tools to chart the course of her life.  This is what compels me.   This is why I’m so thrilled to join the Akilah team.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Feb 6 Opening Ceremony

Join us on this special day to meet our first class of students and their families!

Date: Saturday, February 6

Time: 11 am: Program Begins

12:30 pm: Lunch and tour of the Akilah classrooms

Akilah CEO Elizabeth Dearborn Davis will speak about the Akilah vision and our goals for this first year of classes, as well as our plans to renovate our own campus in Bugesera district. Other guests and speakers include American Ambassador Stuart Symington; representatives from the Workforce Development Authority, the Rwanda Development Board, and the Ministry of Education; and Akilah supporters from the United States and Hong Kong.

Stay after the program to enjoy lunch and coffee with the Akilah team: Monique Schmidt, Joy Businge, Mary Powell, Jonathan Kleiman, Kelley Mulfinger, Irene Kagoya and Muhire Enock.

Please RSVP to info@akilahinstitute.org if you plan to attend, or if you have any questions about the event.

We look forward to seeing you there!

(Click More for directions to the Akilah Institute ) (more…)